News
Sobered PerónLast week, as usual, U.S. policy in Latin America was up against an obstacle: Argentina, which refused to be a Good Neighbor. Foremost, though not the loudest leader of this ...
Mafalda,” the comic strip in which she appeared, was published in Argentina from 1964 to 1973, and remained a cultural ...
Our obsession with Evita, aka Argentina’s former First Lady Eva Perón, shows no sign of waning. This week, the ...
The message from Madrid to Buenos Aires sounded confident enough: "I have irrevocably decided to return in the year 1964." Juan Domingo Perón, 69, Argentina's exiled dictator, ...
Behind locked doors for five days last February, President Juan Perón and top advisers met with Argentina's 16 provincial governors. Last week a report of their candid conversations leaked ...
Eva Peron, known as Evita, was an icon in 1940s Argentina, famous for her populist rhetoric. Her most famous speech inspired the award-winning song Don’t Cry for Me Argentina. Show more Eva ...
Next to Juan Perón, the most powerful man in Argentina may well be beefy Carlos Aloé, governor of Buenos Aires province, where more than a quarter of the country’s people live. Aloé is ...
Glee from working Argentina and the cry “We Won!” from parading young Peronistas overshadowed complaints from workers excluded from the benefits, disappointment that the package delivered was ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results